Cantonese people Essays

  • Urban Life in Hong Kong and Tibet

    899 Words  | 2 Pages

    Urban Life in Hong Kong and Tibet Where they live --------------- In Tibet, people in more urban areas live in houses made of either wood or stones depending on what materials are more easily available in a particular area. The roof is made of tree trunks which is then covered in a thick layer of clay like the house shown below. [IMAGE] There are usually three or four floors with stairs made of tree trunks on the outside. The ground floor is usually for the animals, the second

  • Pros and Cons of Funding the Construction of the Express Rail Link in Hong Kong

    574 Words  | 2 Pages

    it costed too much, which made the controversy. The concept of 'worthy or not' is a complex one and actually depends on what people valued. In 2009, there were about 6607 people crossing the border between the Mainland and Hong Kong by MTR's trains, while that of using two crossing-border rail lines through Lo Wu and Lok Ma Chau were about 278960. Is this huge amount of people who cross the border oftenly going to use the new line? It seems to me that the negative problems brought by the new line may

  • Street Food

    1224 Words  | 3 Pages

    New York City famous attraction, Chinatown, has a variety of Asian cuisine to offer to tourist from all over the world. Ranging from Chinese to Japanese to Thai cuisine. But NYC seems to be lacking of some Hong Kong flavor. Although Hong Kong is considered Chinese, they seem to have developed their own kind of culture and cuisine. In Hong Kong, they are known for the variety of street food they present to every day Hong Kongese and tourist. But sadly in NYC Chinatown it does not even present a fraction

  • The Interview Paper

    906 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Interview Paper Description of Stoneman Stoneman is ninetieth-years-old. He is a 5 feet 8 inch Chinese boy. He has a big nose but small eyes with glasses. By looking at his mouth, you will think that he is a talkative boy because of his big mouth, but not. He is a passive person. If you don’t talk to him, he never opens his big mouth because he knows his mouth stinks. Although you maybe hate stink, you will like to talk with him because he is really very kind and he can give you a good

  • Chinese Food Essay

    1589 Words  | 4 Pages

    that makes the food unique to a culture or country. This is especially true to the Chinese food found in New York. However, there is a misconception, when New Yorkers mentions Chinese food, they usually refer to Cantonese cuisines. As Cantonese cuisines is adapted to the match New

  • Four Major Cuisine

    1005 Words  | 3 Pages

    national customs and other factors, some genetic inheritance relationship is formed, similar flavor dishes, high visibility, and is a favorite of some people the well-known genre called local flavor cuisine. Among them, Shandong, Sichuan, Jiangsu cuisine and Cantonese cuisine, enjoy called "Four Major Cuisine” in China. Yue (Guangdong, Cantonese) Cuisine(粤菜) Yue cuisine, also known as Guangdong cuisine originated in Lingnan, generalized from Guangzhou dishes, East River, Chiu Chow. Then, it evolved

  • Symbolism and Themes in A Worn Path by Eudora Welty

    619 Words  | 2 Pages

    Gianina, my twin sister, has an irrational dislike of bananas and cheese. She will not knowingly eat anything that has bananas or cheese, and in fact, the simple mention of bananas may very well throw her into a fit. Bizarrely, one of her favorite foods is mango cheesecake and she will quite happily eat anything so long as no one mentions it contains bananas or cheese. Gianina’s predilection annoys me not only because my favorite thing to eat is new york style pizza, but also because it reminds me

  • Food Of China

    1595 Words  | 4 Pages

    Food of China The people of China regard eating as an art. Fragrant, Colorful, and Delicious are some of the characteristics of China's diverse cuisines. China's cuisines are consist of eight different types of schooling, known as the "ninth art". These include from Szechuan, Jiangxu, Hunan, Fujian, Beijing, Guangdong, Zhejiang, and Anhui. Chinese cuisines has a extensive history and are known for its delicious flavor and pleasant color. The typical Cuisine entrée is made up

  • Reflection About Prejudice

    713 Words  | 2 Pages

    outgroup based on a comparison with one’s ingroup. Honest speaking, I don’t like Hong Kong people. They are kind of rude and shameless towards the people from the mainland of China. When I was in high school, there was much news reporting Hong Kong wanted to be independent. They always said “our Hong Kong people were … Chinese were….” It felt like they didn’t regard them as Chinese. Also there were always some people claimed they hated Chinese and asked Chinese not to travel Hong Kong. Ironically, after

  • The Hong Kong Chinese Community

    702 Words  | 2 Pages

    years ago." "Chinese culture through thousands of years has never had an elected-representative type of Western democracy system. So it's not a surprise...(Hong Kong) is not a place where people exercise their democratic rights." There is a very common belief that you should not offend or challenge authority. People have lost a lot of confidence in politicians because of poor examples provided by ongoing tensions between Communist China and nationalist Taiwan. "We have to educate them and tell them

  • Scheme $6000: A Benefit to Both the Government and the People of Hong Kong or Not?

    2247 Words  | 5 Pages

    The budget plan has announced the “Scheme $6,000” this year. It is a scheme that people who have Hong Kong Permanent Identity Card aged 18 or above can get $6000 from government. People who choose to defer receipt $6000 can have $200 bonus. It seems that it is a good policy for people: low-income group can have this subsidy to solve their financial problem; the others can save it, or use it to buy their favourite items. But when we think it seriously, is it really a helpful subsidy for low income

  • Tag-Lish Identity

    890 Words  | 2 Pages

    Locating Identity in Language Many circumstances oblige people to move from their native country to a foreign one. Some people tend to bury their habits and accommodate a new way of life while others hold on to what they were raised to such as food, traditions, religion and most importantly, their language. Language has been considered as one of the most commonly used determinants of one’s identity. If someone speaks in Cantonese, people would assume the person is Chinese. In my case, I was raised

  • Aztecsinga Clendinnen

    979 Words  | 2 Pages

    MesoAmerican area and it's history for over 30 years. Having wrote many books on the peoples and history of the region, her knowledge makes her well qualified to write a book such as Aztecs. The book is not one based on historical facts and figures, but one which is founded on interpretations of what the author believes life was like in different spheres of Aztec life. Clendinnen refers to the Aztec peoples as Mexica(pronounced Meh-SHee-Kah)as that is what they called themselves and her interpretations

  • Loyalty In Book Characters

    986 Words  | 2 Pages

    Can the perfect ideal of loyalty ever be achieved? What is loyalty, how can you become loyal person? How do the people of today compare to the heroes in the stories that we read Beowulf Sir Gawin and the Green Knight and Camelot. When do you know you are a loyal person, is it something that you are born with or do you learn to become loyal? Is loyalty a valuable human characteristic?How does someone become a loyal person? In Sir Gawin he proved to be loyal when he showed up to a challenge that no

  • Metis' Struggle for Self Identification

    3674 Words  | 8 Pages

    Metis. Some people feel this unique group of people does not deserve any sort of recognition, whereas others believe their unique history and culture is something to be recognized and cherished. The history of the Metis people is filled with struggle; not only struggles against other powers, but also a struggle for self-identification. Despite strong opposition, the Metis people of Canada have matured as a political force and have taken great strides towards being recognized as a unique people. The word

  • Art History

    1370 Words  | 3 Pages

    Description and Interpretation All five of the archetypal shapes are in my self-portrait. First of all, the outside appearance is that of a square of rectangle. I feel that people who do not know me do not perceive any of the characteristics that the other shapes represent. Stability is the only characteristic represented by the shapes that people perceive of me. Inside my stable world is a circle in the middle of the bottom of the box. Within the circle is a triangle. This represents how spirituality is the

  • Model of Power within Organizations

    860 Words  | 2 Pages

    Introduction To explain the statement: 'Power does not flow to unknown people in the organization', I will give an overview of the Model of Power in Organizations according to Mc Shane and Von Glinow, which includes a definition of the meaning of power, the different sources of power, and the contingencies that need to exist before sources of power will translate into actual power. Finally, I will provide a conclusion and recommendation. The Sources and Contingencies of Power in Organizations

  • Overview of Paparazzi

    1334 Words  | 3 Pages

    When one discovers the phrase "paparazzi," what is their immediate considered? A camera? A flash? My first thoughts are blaring voices, blinding lights, people running to get away, and to put it all in one word, chaos. Paparazzi are freelance photographers that take candid images of celebrities for publication. They are a sinister assembly that are renowned for getting such images by any means possible, if it is by harassment, threatening others, or causing fear. One can see by any celebrities’ reality

  • The Price of Fame: Celebrity's Loss of Anonymity and Privacy

    1143 Words  | 3 Pages

    maintaining the celebrity’s fame. In attempt to preserve fame and appease society’s ever increasing “need to know”, reality and fantasy are merged, the outcome is the loss of anonymity and privacy to the star. Works Cited Freydkin, Donna. "People - Celebrities Fight for Privacy." 7 July 2004. USAToday.com. Web. 18 May 2009. Gameson, Joshua. Claims to Fame: Celebrity in Contemporary America. Berkeley: Univesity of California Press. 1994. Print. Walls, Jeannette. "For Some Celebs, Price

  • How childhood history and culture affects how we live as adults

    515 Words  | 2 Pages

    Childhood history has a lot to do with how we live as adults because certain childhood events could trigger something that would last a life time. Take for example if a child fails at something and the parent does nothing to help the child, the child will grow up thinking that failing is alright and that he or she will have a hard time in life with their job or in school or life in general. Many events from a persons’ life can stick with the person throughout their life like a thorn in the side